Policing and Crime Bill Consideration of Lords amendments Mr
Deputy Speaker (Mr Lindsay Hoyle) I must draw the House’s
attention to the fact that financial privilege is engaged by Lords
amendments 24, 96, 159 and 302. I also remind the House that
certain of the motions relating to the Lords amendments will be
certified as relating exclusively to England or to England and
Wales, or to...Request free trial
Policing and Crime Bill
Consideration of Lords amendments
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Mr Deputy Speaker (Mr Lindsay Hoyle)
I must draw the House’s attention to the fact that
financial privilege is engaged by Lords amendments 24, 96,
159 and 302. I also remind the House that certain of the
motions relating to the Lords amendments will be certified
as relating exclusively to England or to England and Wales,
or to England and to England and Wales, as set out on the
selection paper. If the House divides on any certified
motion, a double or triple majority will be required for
the motion to be passed.
After Clause 26
Inquiry into complaints alleging corrupt relationships
between police and newspaper organisations
5.13 pm
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The Minister for Policing and the Fire Service (Brandon
Lewis)
I beg to move, That this House disagrees with Lords
amendment 24.
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Mr Deputy Speaker
With this it will be convenient to discuss the following:
Lords amendment 96, and Government motion to disagree.
Lords amendment 134, Government motion to disagree, and
Government amendment (a) in lieu.
Lords amendment 136 to 142, and Government motions to
disagree.
Lords amendment 159, and Government motion to disagree.
Lords amendment 302, and Government motion to disagree.
Lords amendment 305, Government motion to disagree, and
Government amendment (a) in lieu.
Lords amendment 307, and Government motion to disagree.
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This first group of amendments includes 10 new clauses
added to the Bill in the House of Lords against the advice
of the Government. It covers four separate issues: part 2
of the Leveson inquiry; the funding of legal representation
for bereaved families at inquests where the police are an
interested person; the maximum sentence for the offence of
stalking involving fear of violence or serious alarm or
distress; and the rights and entitlements of victims of
crime.
5.15 pm
The Government have reflected carefully on the debates on all the
amendments in the House of Lords. Lords amendment 134 seeks to
increase, from five to 10 years’ imprisonment, the maximum
sentence for the more serious stalking offence where the
offender’s behaviour puts a person in fear of violence. The
Government are determined to do everything they can to protect
victims of what can be a terrifying crime. The House will recall
that, only last month, we announced plans to introduce a new
stalking protection order, which will provide the police with a
new pre-charge option to help them to protect victims of stranger
stalking in a similar way to orders that protect victims of
domestic violence and abuse.
My hon. Friends the Members for Cheltenham (Alex Chalk) and for
Gloucester (Richard Graham) have been assiduous in pursuing this
issue for some time and are to be much commended for their
campaign, including the pursuit of a private Member’s Bill, on
behalf of Dr Eleanor Aston, a Cheltenham general practitioner
practising in Gloucester who was stalked by a former patient for
seven years.
Each case must, of course, be considered by the courts on its
facts, but given the harm that can be caused by the most serious
stalking cases we are persuaded that, in such cases, sentencing
judges should have greater latitude to pass a higher sentence
that fits the crime and affords greater protection for victims.
The Government amendment in lieu of Lords amendment 134 will
therefore do three things.
First, the Government amendment will increase, from five to 10
years’ imprisonment, the maximum sentence for the offence of
stalking involving fear of violence or causing serious alarm or
distress. Secondly, it will similarly increase the maximum
sentence for the equivalent harassment offence of putting a
person in fear of violence, which will help to retain consistency
of approach to the most serious harassment offences. Thirdly, it
will increase, from seven to 14 years’ imprisonment, the maximum
sentence for the racially or religiously aggravated version of
the section 4 and 4A offences. In the normal way, those increased
maximum penalties will apply only to offences committed on or
after the date of commencement, but I trust that the amendment
will have the support of my hon. Friends and, indeed, of the
whole House.
The Government remain firmly of the view that, however well
intentioned the motives behind them, the other Lords amendments
in this group pre-empt the proper and detailed consideration of
what are complex issues and that, accordingly, this House should
disagree with them. I will take each of the three issues in turn.
Lords amendment 24 would require my right hon. Friend the Prime
Minister to proceed with what is commonly known as the “Leveson
2” inquiry into the relationships between the police and the
media. Of course, it is vital that the police at all times uphold
the very highest standards of integrity, whether in their
dealings with the media or, for that matter, in their dealings
with anyone else. However, given the extent of the criminal
investigations into phone hacking and other illegal practices by
the press that have taken place since the Leveson inquiry was
established, and given the implementation of the recommendations
following part 1, including reforms within the police and the
press, the Government must consider whether proceeding with part
2 of the inquiry is appropriate, proportionate and in the public
interest.
As hon. Members will be aware, the Government have sought the
views of the public and interested parties, including the victims
of press abuse, through a public consultation that, as it
happens, closes today.
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(Rhondda) (Lab)
The consultation closed 17 minutes ago. The truth of the
matter is that the Government promised that there would be
one inquiry with two parts. As far as I can see, the
Minister is effectively saying—nudge, nudge; wink, wink—“We
are not going to proceed with part 2.” If that is the case,
he should be straightforward and tell us so now.
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With great respect, the hon. Gentleman should look at
Hansard when it is published. That is not what I said at
all. I made it very clear that we have been seeking the
views of the public and interested parties and that we have
to look at what is appropriate, proportionate and in the
public interest.
The consultation sought views on whether proceeding with
part 2 of the Leveson inquiry is still appropriate,
proportionate and in the public interest. As the last of
the relevant criminal cases has only recently concluded,
the Government believe that this is an appropriate time to
take stock and seek views on the various options, as the
then Home Secretary outlined 18 months ago. Submissions to
the consultation will be important in helping to inform the
Government’s thinking.
As hon. Members may also be aware, an application has been
made to judicially review the consultation. Although I
cannot comment on the current legal proceedings, the
Government have committed not to take any final decisions
relating to the consultation until the legal proceedings
have concluded. Given the consultation and the ongoing
related legal proceedings, I respectfully suggest to the
House that this is not an appropriate matter for further
legislation at this moment.
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(Aldershot)
(Con)
I hope the Government will not be intimidated by a campaign
the press are waging at the moment to try to deter them
from implementing the Leveson recommendations. May I just
tell the Minister that yesterday I submitted my monthly
article for the Aldershot News & Mail, as I had been
invited to do—[Interruption.] May I say to hon. Members on
both sides that it is normally very good reading? The
article was about press freedom. I received an e-mail
yesterday evening saying that the paper was sorry that it
would not be publishing it because it was “contradictory”
to its stance on “a free press”. It is extraordinary that
the Aldershot News & Mail, owned by the Daily Mirror
group, feels it is so vulnerable that it cannot accept an
article by myself—my hon. Friend the Member for North East
Hampshire (Mr Jayawardena) is the other contributor.
Leaving aside my criticism of the Aldershot News &
Mail, with which I was pretty robust this morning, may I
say to the Minister that this illustrates a real paranoia
in the media about this issue and it is our responsibility,
as parliamentarians, to be straightforward and recognise
that what we are seeking to do is to protect not ourselves
but ordinary people?
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As always, my hon. Friend makes an important point.
However, let me make it clear again that the Government
will make a decision on this once we have had a chance to
review the outcome of the consultation and in the light of
the legal proceedings, and not before the legal proceedings
have concluded.
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(North
Herefordshire) (Con)
But will it not be awkward for the Government if they
completely ignore the Press Recognition Panel’s submission?
After all, independently overseeing press regulation was
what it was set up to do, and it is unequivocally calling
for section 40 to be implemented.
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As I say, the Government will review the consultation, and
I know the Secretary of State will look carefully at that.
We are committed to not making decisions until the
completion of the judicial proceedings. Hon. Members will
also be aware that the Speaker has certified this amendment
as engaging financial privilege. Our view is that amendment
24 is, at this time, unnecessary, inappropriate and
ill-timed.
The Government fully understand the reasoning behind Lords
amendment 96, which seeks to provide public funding for
legal representation for bereaved families at inquests. It
may be almost seven months since this House lasted debated
this issue on Report, but the Government’s position has not
changed. Our view remains that we should await the report,
expected this spring, from Bishop James Jones on the
experiences of the Hillsborough families. The Opposition
have argued that this issue goes beyond Hillsborough. I do
not dispute that, but the experiences of the Hillsborough
families will have significant relevance for other families
facing different tragic circumstances, and the issue of
legal representation at inquests will undoubtedly be one
aspect of those experiences. Bishop James’s report will
provide learning that could be of general application, so
it is entirely right that we do not now seek to pre-empt
his review, but instead consider this issue in the light of
his conclusions. For that reason, I put it to the House
that this amendment is premature. As with the other Lords
amendments we are debating, we must take into account the
potential significant financial implications of amendment
96. Of course, the resource implications of the amendment
are just one consideration, but it cannot be ignored, and,
again, the Speaker has also certified the amendment as
engaging financial privilege.
Finally, Lords amendments 136 to 142 seek to make further
provision in respect of victims’ rights and entitlements.
These amendments ignore the extensive reforms and
modernisation we are undertaking to transform our justice
system, and to protect vulnerable victims and witnesses,
and, where appropriate, spare them the ordeal of appearing
in court, through an increased use of video link systems
and by rolling out pre-recorded cross-examination. The
amendments would result in an unstructured framework of
rights and entitlements that is not founded on evidence of
gaps or deficiencies in what already exists, or even of
what victims of crime want and need. Some amendments are
unnecessary because they duplicate existing provisions and
practices, or are being acted on by the Government already.
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(Dwyfor
Meirionnydd) (PC)
When will the Green Paper considering the need for a
victims’ law, which was first mooted in February last year,
actually be published?
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We are committed to introducing measures to strengthen
further the rights of victims, and it is important that we
have taken the time to get this right. We will announce our
plans in due course. It is important to be clear that Lords
amendments 138 and 139 are, therefore, similarly
unnecessary, as the training of all staff in the criminal
justice system is taken very seriously.
On Lords amendment 141, on quality standards, the Victims’
Commissioner’s role already encompasses encouraging good
practice in the treatment of victims and witnesses, and the
operation of the victims code, which is a detailed set of
victims’ entitlements. In addition, police and crime
commissioners, who commission local victims’ services,
enter into grant funding agreements with the Secretary of
State for Justice to receive the funds to do so. Those
agreements set out a range of minimum standards for the
services provided. We are currently reviewing existing
standards relevant to victims’ services to make sure that
we have the best possible framework in place.
The amendments, individually and taken together, are
un-costed, vague and duplicative. They could impose
significant obligations and financial burdens on the
criminal justice system.
On Lords amendment 142, it is not clear what the purpose of
directing a homicide review would be. In any case, it is
unnecessary. There is already a statutory requirement for a
review to identify the lessons to be learned from the death
in domestic homicide cases.
Putting aside the many difficulties we have with the detail
of the amendments, the Government are already looking at
what is required to strengthen further the rights of
victims of crime. We are looking at the available
information about compliance with the victims code and
considering how it might be improved and monitored. We are
focused on making sure that we get this work right. We will
ensure that any future reform proposals are evidence-based,
fully costed, effective and proportionate.
As I have indicated, the intention behind many of the Lords
amendments is laudable. On Lords amendment 134, we are
persuaded that the case has been well made for increasing
the maximum sentence for the more serious stalking and
harassment offences involving fear of violence. I
congratulate my hon. Friends on the work they have done on
that.
As for the other Lords amendments, as a responsible
Government we do not want to adopt a scattergun approach to
legislation. Nor can we afford to be free and easy with
taxpayers’ money by incurring substantial new spending
commitments without offering any indication as to where the
additional resources are to come from.
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Mr (Coventry South)
(Lab)
What are the Government going to do about strengthening
protection for victims, particularly when they have to give
evidence in court? Very often elderly people are frightened
to go and confront the person they have accused.
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I noticed that the hon. Gentleman was trying to intervene
before I made that comment. Hopefully he will be satisfied
that we are looking to strengthen victims’ rights, but we
want to do so in a proper, proportionate and appropriate
way.
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Mr (Orkney and
Shetland) (LD)
Taking at face value the criticisms that the Minister
levels with regard to the provisions for victims of crime,
can he tell the House why the Government have not
introduced amendments in lieu, instead of just asking us to
disagree with the Lords amendments? After all,
strengthening victims’ rights was in the Conservative
manifesto at the most recent election; how much longer do
we have to wait?
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As I said just a few moments ago, we do want to look at
strengthening victims’ rights, but we want to make sure
that we do so in a correct, appropriate and proportionate
way. I want to do that work, and in due course we will come
forward with those proposals and ensure that we are doing
it properly. Taking into account the work we are doing,
Lords amendments 24, 96 and 136 to 142 are at best
premature and at worst confused, unfocused and unnecessary.
As such, we argue that they should be rejected by this
House.
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(West Ham) (Lab)
Happy new year to you, Mr Deputy Speaker, and to the
Minister.
We support Lords amendments 24, 96 and 136 to 142, along
with consequential amendments 159, 302 and 307, and we will
vote to retain them in the Bill. We also supported the
original amendment 134, with consequential amendment 305.
We are glad to see that the Government have changed their
position, so we will not oppose their amendment in lieu of
Lords amendment 134.
I thank those in the other place who have worked to bring
these issues to our attention, particularly Baroness
O’Neill and . I congratulate my
noble Friends and , whose determination
and outstanding advocacy for the most vulnerable in our
society has led to the Government accepting our amendments
to the stalking code. Each of the substantive issues before
us is deserving of a full debate in its own right, but we
have only a short amount of time. I will deal with each in
turn.
Lords amendment 24—Lords amendment 159 is consequential to
it—is a new clause that requires the Government to
commission an independent inquiry into the way in which the
police handle complaints relating to allegations of
corruption between the police and newspaper organisations.
It is commonly known as the Leveson 2 amendment, because it
is similar in scope to the proposed second part of the
Leveson inquiry. As was announced by Judge Leveson on 14
September 2011, this is a proposed examination into
“whether the police received corrupt payments or were
otherwise complicit in misconduct”
and into any failure of the police and others properly to
investigate allegations relating to News International and
other news organisations. In 2012, the then Prime Minister,
the right hon. , said:
“When I set up this inquiry, I also said that there would
be a second part to investigate wrongdoing in the press and
the police, including the conduct of the first police
investigation.—[Official Report, 29 November 2012; Vol.
554, c. 446.]
Yet the Government’s consultation, which ends today, as we
have heard, could be seen as a weakening of that
commitment. That underlines the need for the clarity that
this amendment would provide.
5.30 pm
Part 1 of the Leveson inquiry found unhealthy links between
senior Metropolitan police officers and newspaper executives.
Those links led to high-level resignations. There are also issues
around the relationship between the police and the press more
locally, as prior information appears to have been provided about
particular people who will be arrested or a particular search
that will be carried out. All those serious breaches speak to a
fundamental need for us, as a nation, to assess the proper
relationship between the police, the press, the public and the
system of complaints. The proposed second stage of the Leveson
inquiry would ask exactly those sorts of questions. Labour has
consistently supported it but, sadly, real doubts are emerging
about the Government’s commitment to the second stage of the
inquiry. No timetable has been announced for it, and the
Government have stated that it will not take place until all
criminal investigations and trials related to part 1 are
concluded.
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Mr (North East
Somerset) (Con)
Is not the Government’s position extremely sensible? A
succession of criminal trials have looked into this matter.
They have proceeded in a proper judicial way, and most of
the information that we need is already available. To go on
inquiring, inquiring and inquiring is merely adding to the
already £50 million cost that there has been to the
taxpayer.
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I am really sorry that the hon. Gentleman continues to
plough that path. As I have said, the second part of this
inquiry was quite clearly in the mind of his Prime Minister
when he made statements to this House. If we cannot accept
the words of his Prime Minister—
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Mr Rees-Mogg
On a point of order, Mr Speaker.
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Oh, really.
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Mr Speaker
Order. Let the hon. Gentleman put his concern on record.
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Mr Rees-Mogg
The hon. Lady is promoting me. The Prime Minister is Prime
Minister to the sovereign, not to me.
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I have heard some specious arguments in this place.
I hope that the Lords amendment is acceptable to Government
Members and the Minister. It is explicit that the inquiry
should not begin until the Attorney General determines that
it would not be prejudicial to any ongoing relevant
criminal investigations or court cases. To oppose the
amendment is therefore tantamount to admitting that the
Government are no longer committed to an investigation into
corruption between news organisations and the police, and
that they are not prepared to investigate how allegations
of corruption are dealt with. If the Government block Lords
amendment 24 today, the public really can have no option
but to draw the conclusion that this Government have no
commitment to asking the important and hard questions of
our national institutions.
I now turn to Lords amendment 96, with consequential
amendment 302, which was proposed in the other place by
. The purpose of the
amendment is to establish the principle of parity of legal
funding for bereaved families at inquests involving the
police. Many hon. Members have championed this cause,
including during the passage of the Bill. I pay particular
tribute to the tireless campaigning and personal commitment
of my right hon. Friend the Member for Leigh (Andy
Burnham). Unequal funding at inquests and the injustice
associated with that was highlighted by the sorry saga of
the Hillsborough hearings. The scales of justice were
weighted against the families of those who had lost their
lives. Public money was used not to discover the truth, but
instead to defend an untenable narrative perpetuated by
South Yorkshire police. The coroner dealing with the first
pre-inquest hearings into the 21 victims of the 1974
Birmingham pub bombings backed and commended applications
for their bereaved families to get legal funding for proper
representation, but did not have the power to authorise the
funds.
Fees in major cases have attracted considerable public
interest, but inquests at which the police are legally
represented are not confined to major tragedies such as
Hillsborough; far more common are inquests into the deaths
of individuals who are little known. Many bereaved families
can find themselves in an adversarial and aggressive
environment when they go to an inquest. Many are not in a
position to match the spending of the police or other parts
of the public sector for their own legal representation. In
fact, bereaved families have to try, if at all possible, to
find their own money to have any sort of legal
representation. Opposition Members believe that the
overwhelming public interest lies in these inquiries
discovering the truth. It follows that public money should
be there to establish the truth, not just to protect public
institutions, and that must mean equal funding.
In the other place, the Government accepted that many would
sympathise with the intention of the amendment. When she
was Home Secretary, the Prime Minister commissioned the
former Bishop of Liverpool, James Jones, to compile a
report on the experiences of the Hillsborough families. We
are encouraged to wait for his report before considering
the issues further, yet we already know that a system of
unequal funding at inquests is wrong. Public funds are used
to deny justice and hide the truth. The Government need to
act now to change a process that appears to be geared more
towards trying to grind down bereaved families than
enabling them to get at the truth. The Government really
should accept the amendment.
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Mr (Broxbourne)
(Con)
I urge Ministers to listen closely to the hon. Lady’s
strong point. When someone dies while in the care of the
state in a detained environment, people too often go up
against the might of the state. That is simply not fair and
it should not be tolerated.
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I am grateful to the hon. Gentleman for making that point.
We also support Lords amendments 136 to 142, which were
tabled by , along with
consequential amendment 307. Those amendments are designed
to improve the way in which the criminal justice system
interacts with victims of crime, and they are based on the
work of my hon. and learned Friend the Member for Holborn
and St Pancras (Keir Starmer). I presume that the
amendments will be acceptable to the Government because, as
we have heard, they would enact the 2015 Conservative
manifesto commitment to introduce a victims’ bill of
rights. Let me remind the Minister of what that manifesto
says:
“we will strengthen victims’ rights further, with a new
Victims’ Law that will enshrine key rights for victims”.
I understand that the former Minister, the right hon.
Member for Hemel Hempstead (Mike Penning), already
committed to a Green Paper on this issue in a private
meeting with the campaign group Voice 4 Victims in February
last year, but we are yet to have sight of that. This Bill
is the ideal opportunity to take the matter forward, so I
encourage the Government, even at this late stage, to think
again and not oppose the amendments.
The House will know that victims’ rights are protected in
the victims code, which was introduced in 2005 by a Labour
Government. We still support that code, but the rights
included in it are not legally binding, and in the past few
years it has become clear that a firmer legal basis is
required to give distressed and vulnerable victims the
protection that they need.
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Does the hon. Lady agree that if the 2012 European
directive on victims’ rights were put on a statutory
footing in England and Wales, we would be following the
lead of that which happens in Scotland already?
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The hon. Lady is absolutely right, but I think that talking
about Europe might be too much of a red flag in this
Chamber.
If the amendments are agreed to, they will create a
statutory duty on elected police leadership to produce an
area victims plan depending on local needs, and they will
require the commissioner for victims and witnesses to
assess the adequacy of such plans. Finally, the amendments
will empower the Secretary of State to order a homicide
review—basically, a cold case review—when nobody has been
charged with a crime. Taken together, the measures would
allow the victims code to be better enforced and ensure
that our criminal justice system works better for the
victims of crime. The Government will, I hope, offer their
wholehearted support to these amendments.
Finally, I turn to Lords amendment 134, with consequential
amendment 305, which was proposed by my noble Friend
. The amendment would
increase the maximum penalty for those found guilty of
stalking from five to 10 years. In cases where the offence
is racially or religiously aggravated, the maximum penalty
would be increased from seven to 14 years. We are delighted
that the Government have chosen to accept our case, and I
congratulate my noble Friend and all who have pursued the
campaign.
Home Office data suggest that as many as one in five women
and one in 10 men will be stalked at some point in their
lives. Just because stalking is common, it does not mean
that it is not a serious matter. Stalking destroys lives.
It violates an individual’s right to privacy, and therefore
destroys their personal freedoms. It causes fear, and
rightly so, since too often it is a precursor to violent
confrontation.
I know that sentencing guidelines and specific sentences
are the responsibility of the Sentencing Council and judges
respectively. However, extending the maximum penalty will
allow for greater flexibility in the most serious cases and
make it clear that stalking is a serious offence. The
Labour party has provided the Government with the
opportunity to give judges the necessary flexibility to
hand out appropriate sentences to serious criminals. I am
delighted that the Government have seen the need for that
and responded appropriately.
-
(Cheltenham) (Con)
I rise to support the Government’s amendment on stalking in
lieu of Lords amendment 134. This is a momentous day,
because the proposed measures, which would have the effect
of significantly strengthening protections for victims of
stalking, represent the culmination of a 16-month campaign.
I truly hope that what began with a meeting with my GP
constituent Dr Eleanor Aston in 2015 will end here today.
In doubling the maximum sentences for stalking, the
Government’s proposals emphatically and decisively do two
things. First, they recognise that stalking is not a minor
offence. Instead, it is a horrible, violating, destructive
crime that rips relationships apart, ruins careers and can
cause lasting mental harm. All too often, it is the gateway
to serious violence. Secondly, the Government’s amendments
will ensure that courts have the tools that they need to
deal with the most serious cases accordingly. Most
crucially of all, it will give the courts powers truly to
protect victims and to put their needs front and centre in
the criminal justice system.
Let me be clear: when we talk about victims of stalking, we
are not simply referring to the rich and famous: this
campaign has made it crystal clear that ordinary men and
women can fall victim to stalking just as readily and just
as severely as those in the public eye.
-
Before the hon. Gentleman continues, may I say that it was
remiss of me not to mention the work that he has done on
the matter and congratulate him on it?
-
That is very gracious of the hon. Lady, and I am grateful.
The context for the proposals was the horrific seven-year
ordeal suffered by my constituent at the hands of her
former patient. I will not go through all the detail now,
but I will set out some of it. He turned up at her surgery
over 100 times. He posted foul items through the letterbox.
He followed her on patient visits, slashed her tyres and
sent threatening mail. He appeared at a children’s birthday
party her daughter was attending. That caused her
exceptional anxiety and fear. After serving a short prison
sentence, he—in a pattern that is not uncommon with this
type of offence—restarted his campaign. Dr Aston received
packages at her surgery in Gloucester and at her home in
Cheltenham. One was threatening and abusive, and made it
clear that he knew where her children went to school. The
second package simply said, “Guess who’s back”. When he was
arrested again, the search on his computer revealed that
the inquiry, “How long after a person disappears are they
assumed dead?” The judge who sentenced Dr Aston’s stalker
made it clear that he did not think he had the tools he
needed, stating in open court that he had no doubt that the
stalker was dangerous in the sense of posing a significant
risk, but he went on:
“I am frustrated that the maximum sentence...is five years.
I would, if I could, give you longer.”
5.45 pm
These proposals mean that instead of the maximum sentence being
lower than that for shoplifting, it would be put on a par with
that for another violating and upsetting crime—burglary. They
mean that we no longer have the completely unsatisfactory
situation in which the maximum a stalker can serve in prison on
entering a guilty plea, even for the worst imaginable repeat
offence against the same victim, is just 20 months.
I should also make it clear what this is not about. It is not
about saying that all stalking cases should suddenly lead to
longer sentences—that is plainly a matter for the discretion of
the courts—but about ensuring that in the most serious cases,
where victims are truly at risk of serious harm, whether physical
or mental, the courts have the tools they need to protect the
innocent. It is not about throwing away the key and giving up on
offenders. Ultimately, I and others want prison sentences that
reform the offender and address the underlying obsession in an
effective way. The reality, in fact, is that longer sentences, in
appropriate cases, can provide the prison system with a greater
opportunity to rehabilitate and to treat.
I want to thank parliamentarians from both sides of both
Houses—including , for the role she has
played—who have backed these measures, both in relation to my
private Member’s Bill in this place and in their support for the
detailed report that I co-authored with my hon. Friend the Member
for Gloucester (Richard Graham), who has shown extraordinary
dynamism in this campaign.
I want to pay tribute to this Government. I am enormously proud
that more has been done by this Government, both since 2015 and
in coalition, than by any other in history to recognise the
seriousness of this type of offending. In just a decade, stalking
has gone from being treated almost as a joke to being recognised
for the serious offence it is. This step builds on vital work
that has gone before—from creating the offence in 2012 to
enacting stalking protection orders that can offer protection to
victims at the first sign of trouble—and should properly be seen
in the context of other vital measures that are relevant to this
topic, not least the introduction of Clare’s law to protect women
from potentially abusive and dangerous partners.
-
Mr
I thank the hon. Gentleman for giving way, but may I
enlighten him? He was not in the House when the stalking
legislation was introduced by the Labour Government as a
result of a private Member’s Bill, against a lot of
opposition from his party at the time.
-
I am very grateful to the hon. Gentleman for that
intervention, but the reality is that the Conservative-led
coalition Government ensured that the measure was put on
the statute book. However, in the spirit of being entirely
conciliatory, I recognise that a lot of people have made
efforts.
I close by saying that I am grateful to the many
victims—typically, but not exclusively women—to whom I have
spoken and who have shared their stories, as well as to the
stalking charities, such as the Suzy Lamplugh Trust, the
Network for Surviving Stalking, Protection Against
Stalking, Paladin, the Hollie Gazzard Trust, the police and
the University of Gloucestershire, which, incidentally, is
a leader in research on stalking.
Finally, I want, above all, to pay tribute to my
constituent Dr Aston. It was her ordeal that triggered this
campaign. She has shown astonishing bravery, reliving her
suffering again and again. I know that her greatest wish is
that future victims can receive the full measure of
justice. If these proposals are carried, that will be
precisely the result. I commend the Government amendments
to the House.
-
(Birmingham, Yardley)
(Lab)
I had not intended to come along today, but it is a real
pleasure to follow the hon. Member for Cheltenham (Alex
Chalk), who rightly spoke about the real progress that is
being made with the Stalking (Sentencing) Bill. There is no
need to have a sort of ping-pong about who has done more
about domestic violence, sexual violence and stalking
because, frankly, we should all be trying to do everything
we can, and I do not care who does it as long as it gets
done.
The legislation and the amendments before us —particularly
on stalking—represent real legislative progress, but that
will mean absolutely nothing if, in practice, the
legislation is not realised. As somebody who has worked on
the frontline, I am afraid to say that so often we make
brilliant rules in this place—beautiful, fancy written
rules, still on all the fancy goatskins—and it means
absolutely naff all to victims because of issues to do with
resources and how things are properly realised by the
different agencies. That is why I wanted to talk about the
victims code and the amendments to the victims’ Bill that
was introduced by my hon. and learned Friend the Member for
Holborn and St Pancras (Keir Starmer). I urge the
Government to consider the amendments and to consider
making a more robust framework for the victims code, which
is a brilliant piece of regulation. I have no doubt that
every single person in here is totally committed to making
things better for victims. I do not sign up to the idea
that you are baddies and we are goodies. We all come to
this place because we want to make something better.
I was the victims’ champion for Birmingham and did a huge
piece of work on the victims code and victims’ legislation
alongside the Government’s Victims’ Commissioner, and I
have to say that if Members can find me a victim who knows
what the victims is, I will give them some cash now. People
do not realise that they have this many days to ask for
something, and they do not realise that they can have a
victim statement. Only 30% of people remembered even being
asked for one. I ask hon. Members to think back to the day
that the murderer of our friend and colleague was sentenced. The thing that
we do not remember from that day is that man. The thing we
remember is Brendan Cox standing and making the victim
statement outside the court that he had made inside the
court because he knew that he had the rights to do it. That
is rare but it was so powerful in that case.
It is imperative that we look at the amendments that relate
to the victims’ law and see how we can strengthen them,
because I am telling you now—not you, Mr Speaker, of
course, but everyone—that at the moment the victims code is
a hope as far as victims of crime are concerned, and the
Opposition amendments would definitely make it stronger,
especially for victims of stalking and sexual violence. I
ask the Government to think again.
I want to make a quick point about the amendments regarding
the equality of arms in cases where the state is an actor.
I speak for the victims of the Birmingham pub bombings, who
are not just my constituents but my friends. We have a
matter of weeks to answer their plight. Currently, the
Chief Coroner agrees with them that they have not been
provided with an equality of arms, so an adjournment has
taken place before their inquest can be reopened. We have
until February to right that wrong. At the moment, I see
nothing that tells me that that will change. I ask
Government Members to look at the amendments and think
about how they would feel if it concerned the families in
their constituency.
-
With regard to the Birmingham situation, I am very happy to
have a conversation with the hon. Lady outside the Chamber.
I think that she may have slightly misunderstood what is
happening, and I am happy to give a bit more detail about
what is happening with the legal aid process.
-
I am only too aware that the Minister will almost certainly
tell me that the legal aid, through the Legal Aid Agency,
has been granted to two of the seven families of
complainants. Although I am more than happy to meet the
Minister outside of here, I am going to wager that I know a
bit more about it than perhaps he does. I would be
delighted to be proven wrong—in fact, the Home Office has
heard our requests for Hillsborough-style funding—and, if I
am, I will stand on every single platform I can to say that
I was wrong and the Minister knew more than me. So I look
forward to that!
I will conclude by saying that we all want something better
and we all want victims to be treated better, and the hon.
Member for Cheltenham has shown with passion how that can
be realised. But unless we make sure our regulations are
enacted, what we do in this place is slightly for nothing,
so I ask the Government to look again at the amendments
around victims’ rights.
-
Mr
In the last Parliament, I was totally politically
incontinent—in and out of all sorts of Lobbies, voting with
the Government, voting against the Government and voting
with Labour. I have really tried to make sure that, in this
Parliament, I was only in one Lobby—the Government Lobby. I
have managed that loyally for the past 18 months, and I am
just so disappointed that the Government are not willing to
accept Lords amendment 96, because equality of
representation is absolutely critical.
I spoke in this place in a previous Parliament about the
terrible tragedy of deaths in custody—deaths in detained
environments. Let us look specifically at deaths in police
custody. If a person dies in police custody, there is
obviously a coroner’s inquiry, but there is total
inequality of representation at that inquiry. The family of
the deceased are up against the state, the police and their
legal representation. That legal representation is given to
the police without question, and it is funded without
question, whereas the families of the deceased, at a time
of huge emotional turmoil, have their finances pored over
with a fine-toothed comb—it is not just the finances of the
parents, but the finances of siblings, aunts and uncles,
and even cousins—to see whether the family can bear the
cost of their legal representation. That is entirely
unfair; it is not just.
The Lords amendment is very sensible in its scope, and I
would hope, even at this late stage, that the Government—if
for no other reason than to keep me out of a Lobby that I
do not really want to be in—might consider accepting it, so
that we can all finish the evening on a very happy and
unified note.
-
I do not think that it is going to be a very unified note
by the end of the day, and I think there was an element of
irony in the contribution by the hon. Member for Broxbourne
(Mr Walker).
I pay tribute to the hon. Member for Cheltenham (Alex
Chalk) and my hon. Friend the Member for Birmingham,
Yardley (Jess Phillips) for their campaign on stalking. The
legislation has changed over the years, particularly since
1997, and it is good that this issue is now recognised for
the terrible harm that is done to many victims.
I want to talk primarily—this is a bit of a smorgasbord
debate—about the Leveson issues and amendment 24, which I
wish was not necessary. However, it is necessary, and it
has been put on the amendment paper only because their
lordships and a large number of us in this House are
distrustful of the Government’s intention in relation to
what happened over Leveson.
I believe that it is necessary to have the full
Leveson—that is not two Leveson inquiries, but one Leveson
inquiry, some of which could be done before the criminal
investigations were completed, and some of which could not
be done until the criminal investigations were completed.
That was always the promise. It was never, “We will think
about having Leveson 2 once we have come to the end of the
criminal investigations; it was always said from the very
beginning that there would be one inquiry with two parts
and that the second part would happen. In fact, the Prime
Minister, in the quote given by my hon. Friend the Member
for West Ham (Lyn Brown), said those words the day after
Leveson 1 had been produced. So Ministers have absolutely
no excuse for turning round now and saying, “Oh no, no, we
never really intended to proceed with Leveson 2.”
Why does that matter? Why is it important? The truth is
that we are talking about corruption in one of the
organisations of the state that matters most to our
constituents and to the rule of law in this country: the
police. I am sure the vast majority of us agree, given the
little bits and pieces that we have managed to glean from
Leveson 1, that there was a time when the Metropolitan
police, to all intents and purposes, were a partially owned
subsidiary of News International. Metropolitan police staff
went to work for News International. When they had finished
working for News International, they went back to work for
the Metropolitan police. There was a revolving door. On the
very day that the police decided not to continue with the
investigation into what had happened at the News of the
World, the leading investigator was having dinner with
Rebekah Brooks.
6.00 pm
We do not know all the facts because Lord Justice Leveson rightly
said, “I cannot investigate all these elements of corruption in
the Metropolitan police and what went on at the News of the World
until such time as the criminal investigations have been
completed.” They are now complete. I reiterate that not only
Prime Minister made those promises; the then
Home Secretary repeatedly, time after time, said in this House
that there would be Leveson 2. She did not say that we would have
Leveson 2 if it proved necessary, or that we would perhaps have
Leveson 2. She said that we would have Leveson 2 and that it
would be proceeded with as is necessary according to the law, as
the inquiry was originally set up, the moment the criminal
investigations were completed.
From the way in which the new Government have conducted
themselves, they need to listen to Conservative Members such as
the hon. Member for Aldershot (Sir Gerald Howarth) and the hon.
Member for North Herefordshire (Bill Wiggin), who have rightly
made the point that the Government are walking themselves into a
cul de sac. The truth of the matter is that this House and the
other place agreed legislation—section 40 of the Crime and Courts
Act 2013—that is yet to be implemented. This House and the other
House agreed nearly but not quite unanimously that we would set
up a royal charter to put a body in place to decide on the
independent regulation of the press. If the royal charter is to
be withdrawn, there must be a two thirds majority in this House
and a two thirds majority in the House of Lords. That ain’t gonna
happen. The Government are walking into a cul de sac unless they
choose to act and act swiftly.
I believe that the Government should already have implemented
section 40. The hon. Member for Aldershot is absolutely right
when he comments on the wholly exaggerated campaign being run by
the press. The victims of press intrusion were promised something
very simple. The hon. Member for North Herefordshire was right to
say that this is not about MPs or celebrities. To be honest, I do
not give much of a fig about what happens with them. We put
ourselves in the public domain—some of us have done it more than
others—and to some degree we have it coming. However, what really
upset me was when victims of crime had their phones hacked. Why
did the Culture, Media and Sport Committee originally do our
investigation back in 2003? We did it because the people of Soham
felt that their privacy was being invaded by the press and they
had no means of saying, “Go away. Leave us alone.” They were the
victims and not the perpetrators of crime.
We want something that is very simple: a genuinely independent
system of self-regulation. Frankly, IPSO is no better than IPSA.
IPSO is exactly the same as the Press Complaints Commission. It
has no more teeth than the previous organisation; it has some of
the same staff, virtually the same code of conduct and the same
structure. It is not independent at all. We want a code of
conduct that can be relied on so that the intrusion into the
victims of crime stops. We want a right of apology, and for the
correction in the newspaper to be given the same prominence as
the original offending article. I would have thought that it was
in the interests of all the press, at a really difficult time for
them, to have a cheap system of rectification.
The only reason why the amendment is on the amendment paper is
that we want the Government to stand by the promises they made. I
see the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport on the
Front Bench. I hope she will not walk us any further down this
cul de sac, because it will do the victims of crime no favours.
It will do politics no favours because it will look as though we
have simply caved in to a nasty, tawdry little campaign by the
press.
-
(Worthing West)
(Con)
Section 40 should not be introduced. To say to 90% of the
local, regional and national press that they have to be
forced into a group they do not want to join is bullying of
the worst kind. If it were to happen in other countries,
the Council of Europe would probably say it was
interference in the free media.
William Hone, whose life is described in the book “The
Laughter of Triumph”, defied criminal libel law. We should
remember that our press basically got its freedom from that
moment, when ordinary people on juries refused to convict
because they said that the media ought to have the right to
lampoon, to be rude and to investigate. I think that people
ought to ask the question: what would be the effect of
section 40? Would it increase investigative journalism? No,
it would not. It would be a good idea if those backing
IMPRESS and section 40 gave a list of successful and wrong
defamation cases, including of leading politicians who
denied they were drunk overseas and various other criminals
who later turned out to be guilty of the things they were
accused of by the media.
We rely on the media to find out the things few people know
about and make them available to all. The whole effect of
section 40 will be to chill the opportunity for the media
to investigate and report. That is why I believe this House
would be wrong to force the Government to bring in section
40. I hope that we do not and I hope that those in favour
of it will find other ways to pursue their own aims.
-
(Gloucester)
(Con)
I rise to support, as strongly as I possibly can, the
Government’s amendment in lieu of Lords amendment 134. It
recognises the force of the arguments laid out in the
report by my hon. Friend the Member for Cheltenham (Alex
Chalk) and I last year, “Stalking: the Case for Extending
the Maximum Sentence”. The report summarised the work of
our researchers. Through them, we met victims, stalking
charities, academics and police specialists. Everything we
learned confirmed our initial instinct that there are a
small number of very dangerous stalkers, such as my
constituent Raymond Knight who pursued Cheltenham resident
and Gloucester GP, Dr Eleanor Aston, to the point of
nervous breakdown.
I pay tribute to the Government for accepting our report
and its single recommendation of doubling the maximum
sentence for stalking from five to 10 years, for amending
the appropriate sections of the Crime and Disorder Act 1998
on racial and religious aggravated harassment in line with
the change to the maximum sentence for stalking, and for
outlining in correspondence additional training that will
be part of the measures to deal with the mental health
issues of serious stalkers. I know the Home Office and the
Ministry of Justice have worked closely on this together. I
am grateful to both Ministers here today for their action.
I also want to thank Gloucestershire-based in the Lords for her
commitment and contribution, and all those who informed us
and shared harrowing experiences, including a constituent
and her family. I would like to quote from her 16-year-old
daughter, who was so egregiously stalked. She told us that
the stalker
“broke into my house one night…all the knives in the knife
stand were gone…I was sure I was going to die.”
In this particular case, my constituent and her family
prefer to remain anonymous, not least because my
constituent has been moved by the police to a safe house
far from her home and her own children.
I am extremely grateful to all those who informed us,
educated us and motivated us. I suspect the work I have
done with my hon. Friend the Member for Cheltenham means
that the neighbouring constituencies of Cheltenham and
Gloucester have not worked so closely since the creation of
the Cheltenham & Gloucester building society —now,
alas, long since gone. It is for a good cause that we come
together in support of the Government’s change of law.
The Government’s amendment in lieu will give judges the
flexibility they need. As Dr Aston has said, victims will
be able to sleep more easily when the worst stalkers are
sentenced and the stalkers themselves will better
understand the seriousness of their crime and receive more
help in resolving what is a severe obsession and mental
health issue. Of course, as the hon. Member for Birmingham,
Yardley (Jess Phillips) pointed out, that will not in
itself stop stalking, but it shows that victims and judges
are being heard, that MPs and ultimately the Government
listen and that laws can be changed so that sentences
better reflect the harm that a crime can inflict on
innocent victims, most of whom, as in the instance that
inspired my neighbour and me, are women. Ultimately,
justice is only as good as the laws we adapt and the way in
which they are implemented. In that context, I pay tribute
to the Prime Minister, who made stalking a crime on the
statute book when she was Home Secretary, and to the
current Home Secretary, who has introduced protection
orders against stalkers.
I will finish by returning to where this campaign started:
the judge and the victim in Gloucester Crown court. I would
like to thank Dr Ellie Aston for inspiring us, for being
strong and for having faith; other victims for opening
their hearts and sharing their stories; stalking charities,
such as the Suzy Lamplugh Trust, the Network for Surviving
Stalking, Protection Against Stalking and Paladin; and the
Hollie Gazzard Trust, the police and the University of
Gloucestershire, which happens to be a leader in research
in this sad area. This part of the journey for justice for
victims of stalking is now close to over. The hon. Member
for Birmingham, Yardley has reminded us that there will
always be other issues to be raised and resolved, but
today’s amendment in lieu deserves everyone’s support.
-
The whole House listened with great respect and interest to
my hon. Friends the Members for Cheltenham (Alex Chalk) and
for Gloucester (Richard Graham), who have brought to the
attention of the House and the country the appalling
consequences of stalking. I join others in saluting their
efforts to persuade the Government to recognise the gravity
of the crime and in reaching this result tonight, which we
can all applaud.
I thank the hon. Member for Rhondda (Chris Bryant) for
mentioning my intervention on the Minister about section 40
and Lords amendment 24. I will not vote for the amendment
tonight, because the Government have agreed to a
consultation, and I think it right that that process run,
but as I said to the Minister earlier, I hope that the
Government will not be intimidated by the campaign by the
newspapers that the hon. Gentleman referred to. The
newspapers seem struck by an extraordinary sense of
paranoia and a feeling of vulnerability, when we all know,
from the many cases that have appeared, that they are in
the driving seat and have power without a lot of
responsibility.
Insufficient attention has been paid to the Leveson inquiry
and the subsequent report, which was a detailed and
considered piece of work. We should do what the then Prime
Minister, , said that Parliament
should do. Since the Aldershot News & Mail was
unwilling to publish my article today, perhaps I can give
the House the benefit of it.
-
Mr (Torridge and West
Devon) (Con)
My hon. Friend should place a copy in the Library.
-
My hon. and learned Friend suggests that I put the article
in the Library, but when he hears what I have to say, I
think he might be better informed, if not wiser, for I
cannot account for his wisdom—he is a great man.
-
Division!
-
He seriously is a very great man.
I wrote this:
“I believe in a free press but I also believe in a
responsible press. Sadly, the newspapers are becoming
increasingly paranoid about what they see as an attack on
them and are refusing to accept the recommendation of the
latest inquiry under Lord Justice Leveson that an
independent regulator be established. Leveson was set up
after an appalling series of intrusions into the private
lives of people, which included phone hacking on an
industrial scale.”
Milly Dowler’s body was found 200 yards from the boundary
of my constituency in a case that really struck the public
as appalling.
6.15 pm
-
(South Dorset)
(Con)
Phone hacking is brought up again and again by colleagues
who, in my view, want to censor the press. Phone hacking is
a criminal offence, for which people have gone to jail.
There is no need for any further laws.
-
I have huge respect for my hon. and gallant Friend, but the
fact is that the inquiry would not have taken place if
phone hacking had not been discovered on what I have
described as an industrial scale. People’s engagement with
it was utterly immoral, and some went to prison, following
legal action, which I think is fine.
My article continues:
“It is hard for those who have not experienced an assault
by the media to appreciate the level of distress it causes.
I know because some 30 years ago, together with my then
colleague , I had to sue the BBC
Panorama programme for libel—which we won”—
and had the director-general of the BBC fired—
“but at the risk of bankruptcy (and loss of our seats in
Parliament) if we lost.”
For the record, our costs—Peter Carter and partners were
our lawyers—were something in the region £273,000. So I say
to my hon. Friend the Member for Worthing West (Sir Peter
Bottomley) that it is all very well for those who have got
money. They are able to access justice, but this is all
about providing a remedy for those who do not have money
and cannot afford to undertake that sort of action. I
continue:
“Since 1945, there have been no less than 5 Royal
Commissions and enquiries to secure a better and cheaper
form of justice for those maligned by powerful media
barons.”
-
It is worth bearing in mind that when it came to suing the
Metropolitan police to try to ensure that it gave the media
information about what had happened to me, my costs were
£380,000. My costs for suing Rupert Murdoch were £480,000.
In both cases, because it was an no-win, no-fee
arrangement, I did not have to pay anything. However, those
no-win, no-fee arrangements are no longer available in
these cases.
-
I agree with the hon. Gentleman’s point.
I was mentioning the five royal commissions and inquiries
since 1945. The article continues:
“Time and again, reports threatened new laws if the
industry failed to sort itself out, time and again the
industry failed. In his 1993 report, Sir David Calcutt, QC
said of the then regulator, the Press Complaints
Commission: ‘It is not...an effective regulator of the
press...It is, in essence, a body set up by the industry,
financed by the industry, dominated by the industry, and
operating a code of practice devised by the industry and
which is over-favourable to the industry’.
In 2012, Leveson recommended that newspapers should
continue to be self-regulated and that the Government
should have no power over what they publish. However, he
also proposed a new press standards body created by the
industry with a new code of conduct. The new
self-regulatory body should be underpinned by a law to
provide for a process to recognise the new body and ensure
it meets certain requirements. It should also enshrine in
law a legal duty to protect the freedom of the press and to
‘provide a fair, quick and inexpensive arbitration service
to deal with any civil complaints about its members’
publications’. Ofcom should act in a verification role to
ensure independence and effectiveness.”
There we have it. There is a proposal on the table that
IPSO is perfectly at liberty to take up in respect of a
cheap arbitration service. The other point is that it
should not be dominated by former press people, but that is
exactly what IPSO is all about. I am not specifically
advocating IMPRESS, but I see no reason why IPSO should not
be able to organise itself in such a way that it is
compliant. Instead, it has set up a body dominated by
former editors, which does not meet the Leveson conditions.
The Government are right to consult, but I really do not
believe that the newspapers have anything to fear from
these proposals. I believe that they will be in the
interests of the press but, above all, they will provide a
remedy for those who cannot afford to seek a remedy. Surely
our responsibility is to remedy injustice.
-
Mr Cox
My hon. Friend knows how much I return his respect, and he
knows that I would normally regard him as an infallible
guide to almost everything in the planet, but in this
instance I think that suggesting that IPSO is dominated by
press editors when its presiding spirit is Sir Alan
Moses—Lord Justice Moses, a very fine judge who is
vigorously and fiercely independent—is over-emphasising the
point.
-
I am grateful for my hon. and learned Friend’s belief in my
infallibility, and I assure him that he should not be
misguided, because I am infallible in this instance as
well. Let me respond to his point by saying that although
there may be an eminent judge in the driving seat, the fact
is that the membership is dominated by press and former
press people. They are in the majority.
-
Mr (Maldon)
(Con)
That is not true.
-
It is true. Seven of the 12 are former press people, and
that does not meet the Leveson conditions. Let us just meet
the Leveson conditions: then we shall all be happy.
-
(Torbay) (Con)
It is a pleasure to speak in the debate, and, in
particular, to follow some of the passionate speeches we
have heard. I intended to focus on Lords amendments 136 to
142, but my thoughts have been drawn to comments that have
been made about the press in the context of other
amendments.
We have heard about the Aldershot News & Mail, but each
week thousands of homes in Torbay receive a publication
that reports on local news and local issues and gives the
odd opinion on them. It is called “my weekly e-mail
update”, and is subject only to libel laws, and to what I
am happy to talk about and defend as the local Member of
Parliament.
I think we should bear it in mind that we are living in a
completely different era, when more and more of the media
is moving online. There can be no such thing as a press
regulator when there is no press—when websites can be based
anywhere in the world and it is difficult to track them
down even under our own libel laws, let alone regulate
them. The era when people walked down to the newsagent each
morning and again each evening to buy a local newspaper has
pretty much come to an end. The fake news stories about
which people talk—especially in connection with recent
elections in the United States—were not put out by
newspapers. They were not published by print media; they
were published by various people online. There are websites
that are effectively “clickbait”, featuring misleading
headlines that people will merrily share or stories that do
not really get to the nub. A story involving an hon. Member
was recently circulated online. Anyone who knew the facts
would know that it was flagrantly misleading, but that
would not be clear to people who just read the headline
online. Will that story be affected by press regulation?
No. It is nothing to do with press regulation, because it
is not printed material.
When we debate these matters, we must be aware that the era
when only a press publication could circulate a story has
disappeared. We should think about what we are doing when
it comes to a special system that puts them at a
disadvantage, given that, increasingly, they are no longer
as dominant as they were. It is more likely that local
newspapers will close than that they will find themselves
being the arbiters of all opinion. Most constituents are
more than able to use their own common sense and take many
of the claims that they see both online and in the print
media with a pinch of salt, but we have libel laws, and we
need to remember that.
-
I have heard many times the argument that the libel laws
are there, and that it is all very fine and dandy. The
truth is, however, that the people of Hillsborough had no
legal remedy whatsoever. They had no opportunity to respond
to the lies—not libels, because the people concerned were
dead—that were told about them for many, many years. That
is why we need a proper press regulator that is independent
of Government, independent of politics, and independent of
the proprietors.
-
The fact is that someone who wanted to spread mistruths
today would do it on the internet, and that would not be
covered by either of the proposed systems of press
regulation. We would probably now see a story of that type
circulating on the internet, whereas in the 1980s the
internet was something that a few universities used, and
the worldwide web was something that United States military
had developed for the purpose of its own communications in
the event of world war three. It was not as we see it
today. That shows why we need to be conscious of today’s
position on the media and legislation. The industry, in
many cases, particularly the local media, is struggling to
survive and in decline and we do not want to end up
throwing out the baby with the bathwater because of the
horrendous practices of one or two newspapers, in
particular The Sun in that instance.
I wanted to talk mainly about amendments 136 to 142. I
listened with interest to the hon. Member for Birmingham,
Yardley (Jess Phillips). She has a valid point when she
says it is easy to put things that sound marvellous and
fantastic on to goat skins, but what difference it actually
makes on the ground is another matter. That is why I will
agree with the Government’s motion to disagree with the
Lords amendments.
Some of the provisions of Lords amendment 137, for example,
are relatively vague. “Adequate notice” is not defined.
There is also the provision potentially making the police
and other authorities liable for any “unnecessary delay”;
how can the police be held liable if it is the defence that
engages in delay? The judiciary have the role of preventing
court cases from being unnecessarily delayed.
-
The whole point of these amendments is that all the actors
in the criminal justice system—the courts, the CPS, the
defence, or the police—have a responsibility. These
provisions would make the monitoring of how well they are
doing more robust. It does not matter who is to blame; what
we want is the victim to be given the information.
-
The amendment talks about ensuring that victims of crime
are “not subjected to unnecessary delay”; it does not talk
about monitoring. I accept that if we were looking at
having a system of guidance, for instance, proposing “must
ensure” would be putting something on to the statute book.
For me, ensuring victims of crime are supported through the
court process would be more beneficial than these
amendments. In addition, people now have police and crime
commissioners whom they can hold to account for the work
they do.
This is a large group of amendments and we could spend
quite some time talking about it. I do not believe that
adding these amendments to the Bill is the right way
forward. We should look at having a properly consulted-on
system that does not have unintended consequences. That is
why I agree with the Government motion to disagree with the
Lords amendments.
-
I will not delay the House for long. I want to heap praise
on the Secretary of State for not giving in to the pressure
of the media moguls, and, although we are putting a
consultation out, we are determined that no grass shall
grow. I want her to be very clear that we truly appreciate
what she has done.
Colleagues who are unhappy about amendment 24 ought to pay
more attention to the brilliance of my right hon. Friend
the Member for West Dorset (Sir Oliver Letwin), who has put
together a fantastic plan for dealing with this thorny
issue. If they gave it their full attention, they would,
like me, want to see section 40 implemented.
The Press Recognition Panel is completely independent, and
given amendment 24 and the concerns being shown by their
lordships—
-
Mr Rees-Mogg
Will my hon. Friend give way?
-
I will be delighted to give way to my hon. Friend.
-
Mr Rees-Mogg
I am so sorry to disagree with my hon. Friend, but the
Press Recognition Panel is not independent; it is the
creation, under a royal charter, ultimately of the Crown
and therefore of the state.
-
It is still independent because it does not choose who and
what is the regulator; it determines only that the
regulator is independent. It is perfectly acceptable. I
know my hon. Friend is very keen to defend the press, but
this whole instrument does exactly that.
My hon. Friend the Member for Aldershot (Sir Gerald
Howarth) emphasised the point that the local press in
particular would be very vulnerable if it was not
regulated—[Interruption.] Yes, it would. The regulator will
protect it from having to pay the costs. This is why
colleagues should really study what my right hon. Friend
the Member for West Dorset has put together. It is much,
much better than they might originally have thought.
6.30 pm
The claims from the Hillsborough victims for Lords amendment 24
are deeply touching, and I wish the wording of the amendment was
easier to support. This was touched on by the hon. Member for
Rhondda (Chris Bryant). My instinct is to support the victims of
Hillsborough, but the wording of the amendment is not adequate.
It proposes giving the Government a month to commission an
inquiry, for example. My hon. Friend the Minister did a superb
job in answering some of these points. The amendment is not good
enough, but that does not mean that this matter ends here. I
implore the Government to keep on with the good work that they
are doing to ensure that we protect the freedoms of the press—the
local press in particular—and, most of all, that we have a
low-cost arbitration system, which will ultimately benefit
everybody.
-
Mr Whittingdale
I had not intended to take part in the debate, but I want
to say a few words about Lords amendment 24. A lot of the
debate so far seems to have been about whether section 40
should be implemented, but that does not actually have
anything to do with Lords amendment 24, which is
specifically about whether there should be a further
inquiry into the behaviour and performance of the police in
relation to their dealings with news organisations.
Leveson 2, as it is now colloquially known, has been put on
hold until the conclusion of all the criminal cases, and
the amendment rightly recognises that it would be wholly
wrong to have any kind of inquiry that could jeopardise
criminal prosecutions. However, most of those prosecutions
have now been concluded and it is worth looking at the
outcomes of those prosecutions when deciding whether there
is a case for proceeding. Operation Elveden, which was the
police investigation into corrupt payments from newspaper
organisations, overwhelmingly resulted in the acquittal of
the journalists who had been charged with those offences. I
think only two journalists were convicted; the vast
majority were acquitted. We need to bear that in mind,
because the suggestion that there was a massive corrupt
relationship has not proven to be the case.
The hon. Member for Rhondda (Chris Bryant) talks about the
importance of weeding out police corruption and of having
confidence in an institution of the state. I completely
agree with him on that. I want to refer briefly to the case
made by the relatives of Daniel Morgan when considering
whether there should be a further inquiry. I have every
sympathy with the family of Daniel Morgan, who was
murdered, because there was considerable evidence of police
corruption. I can entirely understand their wish to have
his killers brought to justice. A Home Office panel is
examining that case at the moment, and we await its
conclusion. It may well be that further action needs to be
taken to deal with police corruption, and I shall wait to
see what the panel concludes. Let us bear in mind that the
Leveson inquiry was an inquiry into the culture, ethics and
conduct of the press. It was not an inquiry into police
corruption.
The main issue that has dominated the debate has been the
implementation of section 40, which is not covered by this
amendment. I share the views that have been extremely well
expressed by my hon. Friends the Members for Worthing West
(Sir Peter Bottomley) and for Torbay (Kevin Foster).
However, the Secretary of State has set up a consultation.
It concluded today, but it will take some considerable time
before the results are made public. I believe that there
has been a very substantial response to the consultation,
so I do not expect the Government to be in a position to
announce any conclusions about the implementation of
section 40 or about whether there should be a further
inquiry until that work has been done. I suspect that it
will take several weeks, if not months. It seems entirely
premature to table an amendment requiring the Government to
commit now to a further inquiry when we have not even begun
to assess the results of the consultation. For that reason,
I strongly oppose Lords amendment 24.
-
(Kingston and Surbiton)
(Con)
I support Government amendment (a) in lieu of Lords
amendment 134. Having heard the hard-hitting accounts of my
hon. Friends the Members for Cheltenham (Alex Chalk) and
for Gloucester (Richard Graham) in their report on
stalking, no one can be left in any doubt that the
Government amendment should be carried.
Turning to Lords amendment 137, having represented the
police and the prosecutorial authorities as a barrister,
and having represented victims both as a barrister and as a
Member of Parliament, I hope I can see the situation from
both angles. I am entirely supportive of the victims code.
Victims have generally been empowered since the code came
into force as a result of steps taken by the previous
Labour Government, and the beefing up carried out by the
coalition Government and the Government of today.
My concern about Lords amendment 137 is that it would make
the police and prosecutorial authorities responsible, and
in some cases financially liable, for breaches of the
victims code, even if they are not directly responsible.
Under new subsection (3)(a), for instance, the police or
the CPS could become responsible to a victim for delays
caused not by them but by a third party, such as the
defendant. Under new subsection (3)(b), the CPS could be
held responsible if a defendant, or indeed another party
over whom it has no control, treats a victim with a lack of
“dignity and respect”. That often happens in the courtroom
when a defendant gives evidence, or even through how a
defendant instructs their lawyer to present their case, but
that is a matter for the judge, not the prosecutor, to
control.
New subsection (10) is even more concerning because it
would require the Home Secretary to
“take steps to ensure that victims of crime…have access to
financial compensation from public funds for any detriment
arising from the criminal case concerned”.
That is not necessarily a detriment caused by the
prosecuting authority, and there is no requirement of bad
faith, recklessness or negligence on behalf of that
authority. That is a big step both in principle and in
practice. It is a big step in principle because it appears
to impose a liability on one body for the actions of a
third party over whom it may have no control, and it is a
big step in practice because it exposes the police and
prosecuting authorities to a significant financial burden
at a time when we regularly have debates in this House on
the need for greater funding for the police and the CPS.
Paragraph 128 of the explanatory notes on the amendments
explains that “potentially significant” financial burdens
are attached.
Although I am an enthusiastic supporter of the victims code
and the need to give victims the very best support,
imposing a broadly defined liability—indeed, a financial
liability—on the police and the CPS is not the right way to
proceed without more thought about furthering the aims of
the code. More thought is needed, and I am pleased that the
Government will be introducing their own proposals to give
effect to our manifesto commitment for a victims’ bill of
rights. I am sure that that work will take account of the
excellent work of the hon. and learned Member for Holborn
and St Pancras (Keir Starmer) and his commission. I pay
tribute to his work and to all the people involved,
including a number of my constituents.
Question put, That this House disagrees with Lords
amendment 24.
The House proceeded to a Division.
-
Madam Deputy Speaker (Natascha Engel)
I must remind the House that the motion relates exclusively
to England and Wales. A double majority is therefore
required.
Division 119
10 January 2017 6.38 pm
divided:
Ayes: 299 Noes: 196 Ayes: 299 Noes: 196 Votes cast by Members for
constituencies in England and Wales: Ayes: 296 Noes: 190 Ayes:
296 Noes: 190
Question accordingly agreed to.
View Details
Lords amendment 24 disagreed to.
6.54 pm
More than 90 minutes having elapsed since the commencement of
proceedings on consideration of Lords amendments, the proceedings
were interrupted (Programme Order, this day).
The Deputy Speaker put forthwith the Questions necessary for the
disposal of the business to be concluded at that time (Standing
Order No. 83F).
After Clause 110
Police and crime commissioners: parity of funding at inquests
Motion made, and Question put, That this House disagrees with
Lords amendment 96.—(Brandon Lewis.)
The House proceeded to a Division.
Division 120
10 January 2017 6.55 pm
The House having divided:
Ayes: 297 Noes: 202 Ayes: 297 Noes: 202 Votes cast by Members for
constituencies in England and Wales: Ayes: 290 Noes: 195 Ayes:
290 Noes: 195
Question accordingly agreed to.
View Details
Lords amendment 96 disagreed to.
Lords amendment 134 disagreed to.
Government amendment (a) made in lieu of Lords amendment 134.
After Clause 145
Coroners’ investigations into deaths: meaning of “state
detention”
Motion made, and Question put, That this House disagrees with
Lords amendment 136.—(Brandon Lewis.)
The House proceeded to a Division.
Division 121
10 January 2017 7.13 pm
The House having divided:
Ayes: 298 Noes: 198 Ayes: 298 Noes: 198 Votes cast by Members for
constituencies in England and Wales: Ayes: 289 Noes: 193 Ayes:
289 Noes: 193
Question accordingly agreed to.
View Details
Lords amendment 136 disagreed to.
Lords amendments 137 to 142, 159 and 302 disagreed to.
Lords amendment 305 disagreed to.
Government amendment (a) made in lieu of Lords amendment 305.
Lords amendment 307 disagreed to.
Clause 2
Duties in relation to Collaboration Agreements
7.30 pm
-
I beg to move, That this House agrees with Lords amendment
1.
-
Madam Deputy Speaker (Natascha Engel)
With this it will be convenient to take Lords amendments 2
to 23, 25 to 95, 97 to 133, 135, 143 to 158, 160 to 301,
303, 304 and 306.
-
I am conscious that this group covers approaching 300 Lords
amendments, even if many are of a technical nature, and I
appreciate that hon. Members would no doubt like me to go
through all 300, but time is short, so, tempting as it
might be, I will confine my remarks to the most significant
amendments, so that other hon. Members may have an
opportunity to speak.
On Report, way back in April and June of last year, a
number of my hon. Friends tabled amendments worthy of
further consideration. The Lords amendments follow up on
that work. My hon. Friend the Member for Cannock Chase
(Amanda Milling) argued that when a police and crime
commissioner took over the governance of a fire and rescue
authority, the title of their office should be amended to
reflect their new and expanded responsibilities. Lords
amendment 215 provides that in such circumstances the legal
title of the PCC will become police, fire and crime
commissioner. My hon. Friend the Member for The Cotswolds
(Geoffrey Clifton-Brown) proposed a number of sensible
further improvements to our firearms licensing regime, and
I am pleased to say that Lords amendments 111 to 113 give
effect to three of his helpful suggestions.
My hon. Friend the Member for Selby and Ainsty (Nigel
Adams) highlighted the dangers to music festival goers as a
result of the irresponsible discharging of fireworks,
flares and smoke bombs in the often confined space of a
festival venue. Lords amendment 114 would tackle such
reckless behaviour by making it an offence to possess a
pyrotechnic article at a qualifying musical event. As my
right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Culture, Media
and Sport indicated in April, we will ensure that this new
offence is in force for this year’s festival season. My
right hon. and learned Friend the Member for Harborough
(Sir Edward Garnier) sought to strengthen police powers to
require the removal of disguises where there was a threat
to public order. Lords amendment 94 will enable the
required authorisation by a senior officer for the exercise
of such powers to be given orally where it is impractical
to confer the authorisation in writing.
Other Lords amendments respond to points raised by
Opposition Members. The hon. Member for West Ham (Lyn
Brown) expressed concerns about PCCs taking on the
governance of fire and rescue authorities. In response to
similar concerns raised in the Lords, amendments 193 to
199, among others, strengthen the process by which a PCC
brings forward a proposal for the creation of a PCC-style
FRA to ensure that it is as robust and transparent as
possible. She separately argued for a strengthening of the
Licensing Act 2003 by putting cumulative impact assessments
on a statutory footing. We agree, and Lords amendment 117
does just that.
Lords amendments 30 to 33 deliver on the commitment given
by my predecessor on Report to amend the Bill to allow
disciplinary action to be taken against former police
officers outside the normal 12-month period following
retirement or resignation in the most serious and
exceptional cases. Lords amendments 36 to 42, among others,
respond to representations from the Independent Police
Complaints Commission and, indeed, from Opposition parties
that the reformed organisation should retain the word
“Independent” in its title. As a result of these
amendments, the reformed IPCC will henceforth be known as
the Independent Office for Police Conduct. This will help
to reinforce public confidence that the reformed
organisation will be fully independent of those it
regulates.
On Report, the hon. Member for Stockport (Ann Coffey)
argued that the current law requiring a coroner’s inquest
in every case where a person dies under a deprivation of
liberty safeguard, even where the death was from natural
causes, caused unnecessary upset to bereaved families.
-
Dame (Doncaster
Central) (Lab)
I wish to say how welcome amendment 135 is. As the Minister
said, my hon. Friend the Member for Stockport (Ann Coffey)
was particularly aware of the pressures this was placing
not just on coroners but on social services. I am also
extremely glad that my hon. Friend the Member for West Ham
(Lyn Brown) on the Front Bench is, as I understand it,
supporting the amendment as well.
-
I thank the right hon. Lady for her remarks. Yes, we agree,
and amendment 135 therefore removes the automatic
requirement for a coroner’s investigation in such cases.
There will be a continued duty on a coroner to investigate
any death where there is a suspicion that it might have
resulted from violence or unnatural causes or where the
cause of death is unknown.
Last, but certainly not least, and importantly, Lords
amendments 124 to 132 would right the wrongs suffered by
gay and bisexual men who were for centuries persecuted
under homophobic laws for conduct that society now regards
as normal activity. These amendments will confer an
automatic pardon on deceased individuals convicted of
certain consensual gay sexual offences that would not be
offences today, and on those persons still living who have
a conviction for such an offence that has been disregarded
under the terms of the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012.
The amendments will also enable the disregard scheme to be
extended, by regulations, to cover other abolished offences
used to target homosexual activity, including the offence
of solicitation by men under section 32 of the Sexual
Offences Act 1956. These provisions will extend to Northern
Ireland as well as to England and Wales, with the Scottish
Government having separately announced its intention to
bring forward legislation in the Scottish Parliament.
At this point, I want to take the opportunity to apologise
unreservedly, on behalf of the Government, to all those men
who will receive a pardon. The legislation under which they
were convicted and cautioned was discriminatory and
homophobic. I want to make sure that all who were
criminalised in this way and had to suffer society’s
opprobrium, and the many more who lived in fear of being so
criminalised because they were being treated in a very
different way from heterosexual couples, actually
understand that we offer this full apology. Their treatment
was entirely unfair. What happened to these men is a matter
of the greatest regret, and it should be so to all of us. I
am sure it is to Members across the House. For this, we are
today deeply sorry.
This is a historic and momentous step, one of which we can
all be justly proud. I pay particular tribute to the
Under-Secretary of State for Justice, my hon. Friend the
Member for East Surrey (Mr Gyimah), who is the Minister
responsible for prisons and probation, for the work he has
done in government to make this happen. For his campaigning
from the Back Benches, I would particularly like to
mention, among others, the hon. Member for East
Dunbartonshire (John Nicolson).
These Lords amendments improve and enhance the Bill, so I
wholeheartedly commend them all to the House.
-
Ms (Hackney North and Stoke
Newington) (Lab)
I rise to speak to this large group of amendments. In
moving on to making what I hope will be brief remarks, I
have to say how disappointed I am that the Government were
not willing to move on the question of parity of funding,
which is an issue not just for groups of families involved
in Hillsborough, but, as the hon. Member for Broxbourne (Mr
Walker) pointed out, for individual families whose family
members die in police custody. This relates to the previous
group of amendments, but I wanted to make that point.
Some amendments in this group are welcome. We support the
new emphasis on the independence of the new Office for
Police Conduct, given the central role it will play in
ensuring that the police are held to appropriately high
standards. I am glad this has finally been recognised by
the Government, and I pay tribute to the work of my noble
Friend .
We are also pleased that anonymity for victims of forced
marriage will now be extended to Northern Ireland,
following the request by the Northern Ireland Minister of
Justice. There is also a number of sensible and
straightforward improvements to the regulation of firearms,
including a clarification of the laws around antique
firearms, and alterations of the definition of airsoft guns
that should improve public safety.
I also welcome the Government’s support for amendments to
clause 28 that make it possible for investigations into the
most serious misconduct to take place more than a year
after the relevant officers have left the service. Credit
is due in particular to my right hon. Friend the Member for
Leigh (Andy Burnham) for his consistent arguments in favour
of this reform. Families and communities who have been the
victims of injustices in the past can be reassured that, in
future, time need not run out on the service’s own
disciplinary procedures.
Amendments 94 and 300 grant police officers the power to
order a person to remove an item of clothing that is
disguising their identity if a senior officer gives them
oral permission to do so. This is obviously a practical
measure, but we want some reassurance that this power will
not be applied indiscriminately to Muslim women who are
simply observing their religious beliefs, yet get caught up
in the investigation of a crime. We would like the
Government to consider ensuring that it is made absolutely
clear in police training that the sole proper use of this
power is to remove items of clothing that are purposely
worn as a disguise. I ask the Government to look again at
the language of the 1994 Act and to clarify to prevent such
abuse.
The amended Bill also contains provisions for posthumous
pardons for the victims of unjust laws that have
subsequently been repealed. The Minister made a gracious
reference to the work of the hon. Member for East
Dunbartonshire (John Nicolson), who has tabled a private
Member’s Bill on the issue. There is much to welcome in
this set of amendments. My noble Friend Lord Kennedy, along
with , Baroness Williams
and others, played a key role in the debate. made the amendments
more comprehensive in scope by including the many men who
had been unjustly targeted, and supported the
extension of the legislation to Northern Ireland. Those
contributions would have enormously enriched any
legislation on this topic.
Labour Members are pleased that the Government have
apologised, and support the pardons for wrongfully
convicted gay men who have now died. Placing an unnecessary
bureaucratic burden on victims of injustice was clearly
wrong. We also praise the expertise that has featured in
the process and the debate. Although we believe that the
Government could have gone further—especially in relation
to the issue of pardons for people who were convicted under
sexual offences legislation in the past purely because they
were homosexual—we do not oppose their amendments.
Mindful of the fact that this is the last group of
amendments we shall discuss before the Bill returns to the
other place, I want to pay particular tribute to the expert
views that have contributed to its progress. Many retired
and serving police officers have made excellent
contributions both here and in the other place, along with
many learned members of the judiciary, and that has been
reflected in the quality of the debate. It is important to
note the expert nature of those contributions because in
recent months some disdain has been expressed for
expertise, although when it comes to police and criminal
policy, expertise does not go amiss.
-
(Selby and Ainsty)
(Con)
I want to speak briefly about Lords amendment 114. Let me
take this opportunity to thank the Minister, the current
Secretary of State in her former guise as a Home Office
Minister, and the Prime Minister in her previous role as
Home Secretary for the work that they did with me in making
the amendment possible. Provision for parity in law between
people who let off fireworks, flares and smoke bombs at
football matches and people who do so at music festivals is
a step in the right direction. Every year hundreds of
people are maimed and injured by flares, and I appreciate
all the Government’s efforts. The amendment provides a good
example for any Member who is thinking of trying to
introduce a ten-minute rule Bill. It proves that laws can
be changed in that way, as long as Members work closely
with Ministers—and, in this case, Home Secretaries.
-
I am grateful to my hon. Friend for thanking all who have
been involved. He should be thanked as well, not just for
the work that he did on his own account but for his work in
bringing organisations together, so that they could act
constructively to produce a workable provision.
-
I think it extremely important to work with industries when
introducing new laws, to prevent any unintended
consequences that might have a knock-on effect on them.
This is very positive news. During the next festival
season, people will be able to go and enjoy themselves, and
parents sending their kids off to festivals around the
country will be safe in the knowledge that throwing flares
is an offence. I hope that the amendment will discourage
the lunatics from doing that next year, and, once again, I
thank Ministers for all their work.
-
I rise to support amendment 135, and I am delighted the
Government have accepted ’s amendment.
I am a barrister and have represented many bereaved
families and public authorities at coroners’ inquests, but
I had not expected this fairly niche area of legal practice
to feature so prominently in my constituency casework after
being elected as an MP. Shortly after I was elected, an
incredibly dignified lady called Rosalind asked for my help
because of inordinate delays in the west London coroner’s
court in issuing her husband’s death certificate, which
meant the insurance company was holding up funeral
arrangements.
7.45 pm
There were certainly problems with the service standards at that
coroner’s court, and unfortunately there still are, and I raised
them both with the court and in this House. But that case would
not have even been before a coroner’s court had Rosalind’s
deceased husband not been the subject of a deprivation of liberty
safeguard or DOLS and had he not died in a care home.
Section 1 of the Coroners and Justice Act 2009 requires that a
coroner hold an inquest in certain defined circumstances such as
a death in custody or otherwise in state detention—another
example is a violent or unnatural death. In cases that do not
fulfil those mandatory criteria, the coroner has discretion about
whether to open an inquest, depending on the facts.
Since the Mental Capacity Act 2005 came into force, the
definition of whether someone is detained or deprived of their
liberty has been tested in the courts numerous times. In 2014,
the Supreme Court considered the appeal of P v. Cheshire West and
Chester Council, and P and Q v. Surrey County Council. In those
cases, the Supreme Court gave a very broad definition of
deprivation of liberty. The result of that decision has been that
authorisations now have to be sought for deprivation of liberty
in many more cases than they used to. That includes most cases
where a person suffers from dementia and is in a care home, where
they are not detained in the way in which we would use that word,
but they would be prevented from leaving if they tried to do so.
In one care home in my constituency, 90% of residents are now
subject to DOLS, and on the current interpretation of the law
there would have to be an inquest in each of their cases, even
if, as is likely, they died of entirely predictable natural
causes in their sleep. This has caused not only a huge upturn in
the work of coroners’ courts, but upset to many families who have
to go through the trauma of an inquest after the trauma of losing
a loved one.
I raised this problem, I think for the first time in this House,
in a Westminster Hall debate on 16 December 2015, and I am
delighted that the Government have now found a legislative
vehicle to reverse the unintended effect of the Cheshire West
judgment. I say “unintended” because that case was not about
coroners’ courts, and the issue was not canvassed before the
Supreme Court. I can safely say that it was not the intention of
this House in passing the Coroners and Justice Act or the Mental
Capacity Act to mandate an inquest in every case in which a DOLS
applies and to apply a rule intended to cover people in the
state’s care in terms of detention in a prison or an immigration
detention facility or police custody to patients needing care in
care homes or in hospital.
I should make it clear that this amendment in no way precludes
inquests being opened into deaths in care homes or hospitals
where DOLS apply. Those inquests will only not be mandated;
coroners will be able to open them at their discretion and the
matter could be referred to the coroner by a family or by a
member of staff at a care home or by anyone else.
When I got the first of my many cases in this area, I went to see
the Chief Coroner for England and Wales. He was very helpful. I
have read his 2014 and 2015 annual reports, both of which refer
to this problem and to the massive increase in demand on
coroners’ time caused by it. I am sure from having read his
reports that the Chief Coroner would support this amendment or an
amendment that has the same effect.
I commend the Government on accepting ’s amendment, and I
commend her on introducing it in the other place and Members of
this House who have supported it. Finally, I commend Rosalind and
Brook House nursing home in New Malden on first raising this
problem with me. I hope they are satisfied that a piece of
constituency casework that they brought to me has culminated in a
change in the law.
Lords amendment 1 agreed to.
Lords amendments 2 to 23, 25 to 95, 97 to 133, 135, 143 to 158,
160 to 301, 303, 304 and 306 agreed to.
Motion made, and Question put forthwith (Standing Order No. 83H),
That a Committee be appointed to draw up Reasons to be assigned
to the Lords for disagreeing to their amendments 24, 96, 136 to
142, 159, 302 and 307.
That Ms , , , , and be members of the
Committee.
That be the Chair of the
Committee.
That three be the quorum of the Committee.
That the Committee do withdraw immediately.—(Christopher
Pincher.)
Question agreed to.
Committee to withdraw immediately; reasons to be reported and
communicated to the Lords.
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